David Adams on Grammarly Answershttp://www.grammarly.com/answers/users/203229/david-adams2015-08-02T15:25:33ZSentencehttp://www.grammarly.com/answers/questions/17517-sentence/
<p>How should the sentence read?</p><p>See example: </p><blockquote>Maurice T. Suttles VFW Post 3413 celebrated it on May 10, with the usually breakfast of egg, sausage, bisque and gravy.</blockquote>
<p><small>asked <a href="/answers/questions/17517-sentence/">Jul 06 &#39;13 at 01:40</a> by <a href="/answers/users/203229/david-adams" class="profile">David Adams</a>, New member</small></p>
<h3>3 answers</h3>
<p>
It would be nice to know what he celebrated. I think you mean &#39;biscuits&#39;, not bisque.</p>
<p><small>answered <a href="/answers/questions/17517-sentence/#answer_23367">Jul 06 &#39;13 at 01:55</a> by <a href="/answers/users/132282/lewis-neidhardt" class="profile">Lewis Neidhardt</a>, Grammarly Fellow</small></p>
<p>
The grammatical point is that you need an adjective (usual) before the noun (breakfast).&nbsp; Usually is an adverb.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; In this context, biscuits sounds almost as odd as bisque.&nbsp; One would expect something like beans or bacon.</p>
<p><small>answered <a href="/answers/questions/17517-sentence/#answer_23385">Jul 06 &#39;13 at 09:22</a> by <a href="/answers/users/204353/michael-cranfield" class="profile">Michael Cranfield</a>, Expert</small></p>
<p>
I suspect the use of the word &quot;it&quot; in the first sentence means there was a previous sentence that explained that Maurice had a birthday, an anniversary, or other noteworthy event. In that case, the sentence went wrong with the formal name&nbsp;and reference to the fellow&#39;s Veteran of Foreign Wars Post. That would have belonged in the first sentence. And of course, &quot;the usually&quot; should be replaced by &quot;his usual&quot;</p>
<p><small>answered <a href="/answers/questions/17517-sentence/#answer_23411">Jul 07 &#39;13 at 02:54</a> by <a href="/answers/users/210159/earl-blacklock" class="profile">Earl Blacklock</a>, New member</small></p>
sentencehttp://www.grammarly.com/answers/questions/17519-sentence/
<p>looking for an answer?</p><p>See example: </p><blockquote>It is always fun to go in on Friday morning to see who has come to visit us from another post.</blockquote>
<p><small>asked <a href="/answers/questions/17519-sentence/">Jul 06 &#39;13 at 01:42</a> by <a href="/answers/users/203229/david-adams" class="profile">David Adams</a>, New member</small></p>
<h3>1 answer</h3>
<p>
If you want an answer, ask a question.</p>
<p>
If this is an every Friday thing, make &#39;morning&#39; plural.</p>
<p>
&nbsp;</p>
<p>
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; It is always fun to go in on Friday mornings to see who has come to visit us from another post.</p>
<p><small>answered <a href="/answers/questions/17519-sentence/#answer_23365">Jul 06 &#39;13 at 01:53</a> by <a href="/answers/users/132282/lewis-neidhardt" class="profile">Lewis Neidhardt</a>, Grammarly Fellow</small></p>
correct sentensehttp://www.grammarly.com/answers/questions/44783-correct-sentense/
<p>Maurice T. Suttles VFW Post 3413, "Commander and Ladies Auxiliary President," stopped in Palmer Restraunt to support Jude Prather, who was running for City Councilman Place 2.</p><p>See example: </p><blockquote>Maurice T. Suttles VFW Post 3413, "Commander and Ladies Auxiliary President," stopped in Palmer Restraunt to support Jude Prather, who was running for City Councilman Place 2.</blockquote>
<p><small>asked <a href="/answers/questions/44783-correct-sentense/">Nov 06 &#39;13 at 08:38</a> by <a href="/answers/users/203229/david-adams" class="profile">David Adams</a>, New member</small></p>